thinking like a mountain;
feeling like the sky
meeting mySelf
in all that displays within the field of awareness
knowing I am ever here, as this,
being lived by the breath
within the Breath
I bow deeply
before my compost heap
– ml
Through a genuine experience of identifying with all beings, we may come to see our own interest served by conservation, through genuine self-love, love of a widened and deepened self, an ecological self.
When we plant a tree we are planting ourselves. Releasing dolphins back to the wild, we are ourselves returning home. Composting leftovers, we are being reborn as irises and apples. We can “think like a mountain,” in Aldo Leopold’s words, and we can discover ourselves to be everywhere and in everything, and we can know the activity of the world as not separate from who we are but rather of what we are. The practice of the “nonlocal self” means that when we work for the restoration of the rain forest, we are restoring our “extended self.”
– Joan Halifax Roshi, The Fruitful Darkness
Joan Halifax Roshi and Upaya Zen Center
Sculpture by Frederick Franck at Pacem in Terris
“Your mind and your body, and all the mountains, rivers, and spaces of the earth are merely phenomena that exist within the One Bright True Mind.”
~Surangama Sutra
❤
A more pithy pointer would be hard to find, dear Bob. Thank you.
And so. The One Bright True Mind (aka This Unlit Light) bows to itself as it turns the compost … and folds towels in the laundry …
And all is well, all is very well, ever and always.
🙂
Yes, it is so! ❤